Max Mosley will soon find out if he can survive a lurid sex scandal and remain president of FIA. The organization will meet in Paris on Tuesday for a special "extraordinary" assembly to vote on whether Mosley is fit to see out his current term.

FIA president Max Mosley won't be on duty at the official dinner and prize-giving ceremony for the Monaco Grand Prix next week. He will attend the Formula One race, his first since a British tabloid reported last month that he engaged in sex acts with five prostitutes that allegedly involved Nazi role-playing.

The tabloid newspaper accusing Formula One president Max Mosley of taking part in Nazi role-play with prostitutes said it will send videotapes of the encounter to the sport's governing body. The News of the World published a follow-up story Sunday in which it quoted an unidentified prostitute who is said to have participated in sex acts with the 67-year-old Mosley.

Formula One chief executive Bernie Ecclestone tried to distance his organization from Max Mosley on Friday and a growing list of motor sports figures pushed for the FIA president to step down amid a sex scandal.

Formula One teams and manufacturers are questioning whether Max Mosley can stay on as FIA president following a sex scandal. Toyota, Honda, BMW and Mercedes-Benz all issued statements Thursday expressing disappointment over Mosley's behavior, but stopped short of calling for his resignation.